Heitor
Villa-Lobos (1887-1959)
String
Quartets Nos. 3, 15 and 10
"I
love to write quartets. One could say that it is a mania." Villa-Lobos
made his confession, quoted by Pierre Vidal, in Paris in the
spring of 1958. He had completed his seventeenth and final quartet the year
before and had begun to sketch an eighteenth. It is usual to think of Villa-Lobos's
prodigious output in orchestral terms, and it may come as a surprise that
chamber music forms a substantial part of his work. Of that chamber music string
quartets are by far the major constituent, and within the broader context of
the twentieth-century string quartet, dominated by Bartók and Shostakovich,
Villa-Lobos's seventeen quartets must be considered a significant, though
poorly acknowledged, contribution.
Villa-Lobos
attributed his knowledge of the string quartet to the study of Haydn. Whether
or not one accepts the veracity of his claim, any attempt to find traces of the
Viennese master in the Brazilian's work would be in vain. There are no stylistic
connections, and sonata form itself is all but absent. The keys to Villa-Lobos's
quartet idiom lie elsewhere. A primary source of inspiration is the rich and
diverse musical folklore of Brazil, which the composer
discovered between the ages of 18 and 25, when he traveled extensively through
the Northeast, the Amazon basin and the South with touring theatrical
companies. Even earlier he had come to know the lundu, the chôro, the maxixe
and other forms of "urban folklore," better described as the popular
music of the times. To those Brazilian impressions may be added a taste for
Renaissance polyphony, the ricercare, Bach's fugues and Franck's cyclical
principle, the last acquired most likely through self-study of d'Indy's Cours
de composition musicale. In this highly personalized scheme of things the
Viennese classical structures and especially the sonata held little attraction
for Villa-Lobos. Instead the mostly self-taught composer found his own,
non-academic solutions to the problems of form and unity. His frequent reliance
on imitation - the successive entry of a theme in all four voices - affirms an
innate feeling for fugal thought. Variation, which substitutes for development,
creates a sense of continuity, often transforming one musical idea into another
in a "stream of consciousness." In his study of the quartets,
published in 1978 by the Museu Villa Lobos, Arnaldo Estrella describes this as
"a flowing brook, a constant becoming." Conversely, variation also
creates contrast, a stylistic device that Villa-Lobos achieved even more
dramatically through abrupt juxtapositions. Finally it must not be forgotten
that the composer began his professional life as a cellist in small ensembles,
"orquestrinas," that entertained in cafés, music halls and theatres.
Many ideas in the quartets seem conceived in terms of the cello; even when
introduced by another instrument, they attain fullest expressivity when heard
in the cello part. Villa-Lobos's experience as a string player may also account
for the uncommon sonorous combinations and instrumental techniques that impart
a further dimension of originality. That is often most evident in the scherzos,
which give freest reign to his exuberant flights of fancy.
Amidst
the baffling, sometimes uneven profusion of the Brazilian's music, the
seventeen string quartets maintain a consistently high quality and become in
later years his chosen medium of expression. Chronologically they form four
groups. The first four quartets were composed between 1915 and 1917, a period of
much other chamber music, including the second Sonata-Fantasia for violin and
piano, two cello sonatas and the second piano trio. Thereafter a fourteen-year
hiatus intervenes in the quartets. That period from 1917 to 1931 saw the
creation of major orchestral works, among them Uirapuru, Amazonas and the six
orchestral Chôros. Much of that time was spent in Paris, where Villa-Lobos came
into contact with Ravel, Dukas, Falla, Schmitt, Honegger, Stravinsky,
Prokofiev, Casella and Varèse - contact that obviously bore fruit. His return
to the string quartet in 1931 produced one isolated example, the fifth. For the
next seven years he energetically focused on the development of musical
education in Brazil, composing a multitude of choral pieces. The sixth
quartet, also isolated, appeared in 1938, and four more years were to pass
before Villa-Lobos's involvement with the quartet resumed and intensified. From
1942 onward he produced eleven quartets in fifteen years.
Musically
the quartets belong to three periods. To the early period belong the first four
quartets. Of these, the first has little in common with the others. It is in
fact a six-part suite with a folkloric veneer; its three successors, with few
traces of national flavour, move tentatively toward the originality that
Villa-Lobos was seeking. The fifth and sixth form an overtly nationalistic
pair, even indicated by the designations Quarteto Popular No. I and II Quarteto
Brasileiro. In a practice unusual for Villa-Lobos the fifth quartet quotes
actual folk melodies, but the sixth absorbs folkloric elements into a broader
musical spectrum and, significantly, marks the maturation of his quartet idiom.
The seventh to the seventeenth quartets belong to the third phase, wherein
national elements become increasingly universalized and find ultimate
expression in the rarefied atmosphere of the final masterpieces.
Quartet
No. 3, composed in 1916 and first played in 1919, stands out from the rest of
Villa-Lobos's quartets in respect to form, content and style. The language is
close to French impressionism, and one senses Debussy's presence in the melodic
and harmonic material. Furthermore, the form is cyclical with much of the music
related to the generative theme heard at the very outset, and in this regard d'Indy
seems to have left his mark. Clear textures, refined sonorities and superb
balancing of the instruments add to the perception that the third is the most
French of all Villa-Lobos's quartets. The second violin, viola and cello
announce the ten-note germ theme at the beginning of the first movement, which
is serene, seamlessly flowing and moderately paced. The colours are subdued and
often magical, owing to the use of harmonics, and the music follows a course of
unbroken metamorphosis and development. The quartet owes its nickname, the
"Popcorn" Quartet, to the scherzo, a movement predominantly in
pizzicato that suggests the sound of popping corn. Right- and left-hand pizzicati,
glissandi, throbbing polyrhythms and bowed passages all contribute to what must
be one of the most original movements in the entire string quartet literature.
Unusual timbres are heard also in the slow movement, where the strings are
muted with the mute placed upside down to produce an imitation of bagpipes.
Harmonic pizzicati add special colour to the initial statement of the theme,
derived from the first movement's generative theme, and this quiet, meditative
movement proceeds wrapped in an aura of subtle beauty. Insistent semiquavers
herald the final movement and provide the first hints of Brazilian flavour,
albeit with a Gallic slant. Melodic ideas from the previous movements return,
underscoring the quartet's cyclical nature until the end, an emphatic coda.
Written
in New York in 1954 and premièred by the Juilliard String Quartet in 1958, the
fifteenth is known as the "Harmonics" Quartet, owing to the timbral
effects heard at the beginning and near the end of the slow movement. Tonal and
rather bright in mood, the first movement follows Villa-Lobos's customary A-B-A
form with a dance-like coda appended. After the enchanted, light-filled opening
of the slow movement, the mood darkens with the appearance of the main theme. A
central section, suggestive of a modinha, sustains the serious tone. In
his study of Villa-Lobos's quartets Arnaldo Estrella likens the scherzo to one
of Beethoven's, noting its rhythmic vitality and youthful spirit. The cello
announces the main theme of the finale, which is atypically slow and serious.
Quartet
No. 10, composed in 1946, was premièred in Paris in 1950 by the Quartet de São
Paulo. Less severe than the ninth quartet, it vacillates between atonality and
tonality. Arnaldo Estrella finds its first movement less remarkable for its
material than for what Villa-Lobos makes of it. From two elements, the first an
unpromising chromatic motif, the second a more interesting rhythmic figure, the
movement grows by variation, amplification, conjunction, and fragmentation,
creating a sense of development within Villa-Lobos's customary ternary form.
Contrary to the majority of his slow movements, the Adagio possesses
nothing of folkloric or nostalgic character, but it is no less emotionally
intense. The atonal scherzo is built of two elements, one rhythmic and
reminiscent of the first movement's rhythmic idea, the other melodic, though
consisting of only two notes separated by a minor second. The trio, in the
minor mode, has hints of tragedy. Tonality is restored in the finale, which
begins with a simple, folklike melody and has episodes in C major, G-flat major
and F major. After a faster, dissonant central section in 7/8 time, the quartet
ends with are affirmation of C major.
David Nelson
Danubius
Quartet
The
Danubius Quartet has won considerable acclaim since its establishment in 1983.
With the violinists Judit Tóth and Adél Miklós, violist Cecilia Bodolai and
cellist Ilona Wibli, and the artistic direction of the distinguished violinist Vilmos
Tátrai, the quartet won awards at Trapani, Evian and Graz in the earlier years
of its foundation, and has recorded, among other works, the String Quartet No.
1 of Reményi for Hungaroton, the complete String Quartets of Villa-Lobos for
Marco Polo and for Naxos the Mozart and Brahms Clarinet Quintets. The Danubius
Quartet has given recitals in Austria, Germany, Yugoslavia, Italy, France and
Switzerland and appeared at a number of international festivals.